2012 USF Cougar Football Notes -- Season 15
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Football Coaching Records
FOOTBALL COACHING RECORDS Overall Coaching Records 2 Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Coaching Records 5 Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) Coaching Records 15 Division II Coaching Records 26 Division III Coaching Records 37 Coaching Honors 50 OVERALL COACHING RECORDS *Active coach. ^Records adjusted by NCAA Committee on Coach (Alma Mater) Infractions. (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct. Note: Ties computed as half won and half lost. Includes bowl 25. Henry A. Kean (Fisk 1920) 23 165 33 9 .819 (Kentucky St. 1931-42, Tennessee St. and playoff games. 44-54) 26. *Joe Fincham (Ohio 1988) 21 191 43 0 .816 - (Wittenberg 1996-2016) WINNINGEST COACHES ALL TIME 27. Jock Sutherland (Pittsburgh 1918) 20 144 28 14 .812 (Lafayette 1919-23, Pittsburgh 24-38) By Percentage 28. *Mike Sirianni (Mount Union 1994) 14 128 30 0 .810 This list includes all coaches with at least 10 seasons at four- (Wash. & Jeff. 2003-16) year NCAA colleges regardless of division. 29. Ron Schipper (Hope 1952) 36 287 67 3 .808 (Central [IA] 1961-96) Coach (Alma Mater) 30. Bob Devaney (Alma 1939) 16 136 30 7 .806 (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct. (Wyoming 1957-61, Nebraska 62-72) 1. Larry Kehres (Mount Union 1971) 27 332 24 3 .929 31. Chuck Broyles (Pittsburg St. 1970) 20 198 47 2 .806 (Mount Union 1986-2012) (Pittsburg St. 1990-2009) 2. Knute Rockne (Notre Dame 1914) 13 105 12 5 .881 32. Biggie Munn (Minnesota 1932) 10 71 16 3 .806 (Notre Dame 1918-30) (Albright 1935-36, Syracuse 46, Michigan 3. -
Tribute to Champions
HLETIC C AT OM M A IS M S O I C O A N T Tribute to Champions May 30th, 2019 McGavick Conference Center, Lakewood, WA FEATURING CONNELLY LAW OFFICES EXCELLENCE IN OFFICIATING AWARD • Boys Basketball–Mike Stephenson • Girls Basketball–Hiram “BJ” Aea • Football–Joe Horn • Soccer–Larry Baughman • Softball–Scott Buser • Volleyball–Peter Thomas • Wrestling–Chris Brayton FROSTY WESTERING EXCELLENCE IN COACHING AWARD Patty Ley, Cross Country Coach, Gig Harbor HS Paul Souza, Softball & Volleyball Coach, Washington HS FIRST FAMILY OF SPORTS AWARD The McPhee Family—Bill and Georgia (parents) and children Kathy, Diane, Scott, Colleen, Brad, Mark, Maureen, Bryce and Jim DOUG MCARTHUR LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Willie Stewart, Retired Lincoln HS Principal Dan Watson, Retired Lincoln HS Track Coach DICK HANNULA MALE & FEMALE AMATEUR ATHLETE OF THE YEAR AWARD Jamie Lange, Basketball and Soccer, Sumner/Univ. of Puget Sound Kaleb McGary, Football, Fife/Univ. of Washington TACOMA-PIERCE COUNTY SPORTS HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES • Baseball–Tony Barron • Basketball–Jim Black, Jennifer Gray Reiter, Tim Kelly and Bob Niehl • Bowling–Mike Karch • Boxing–Emmett Linton, Jr. and Bobby Pasquale • Football–Singor Mobley • Karate–Steve Curran p • Media–Bruce Larson (photographer) • Snowboarding–Liz Daley • Swimming–Dennis Larsen • Track and Field–Pat Tyson and Joel Wingard • Wrestling–Kylee Bishop 1 2 The Tacoma Athletic Commission—Celebrating COMMITTEE and Supporting Students and Amateur Athletics Chairman ������������������������������Marc Blau for 76 years in Pierce -
A Game Plan to Conserve the Interscholastic Athletic Environment After Lebron James Kevin P
Marquette Sports Law Review Volume 14 Article 5 Issue 2 Spring A Game Plan to Conserve the Interscholastic Athletic Environment after LeBron James Kevin P. Braig Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw Part of the Entertainment and Sports Law Commons Repository Citation Kevin P. Braig, A Game Plan to Conserve the Interscholastic Athletic Environment after LeBron James, 14 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 343 (2004) Available at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw/vol14/iss2/5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A GAME PLAN TO CONSERVE THE INTERSCHOLASTIC ATHLETIC ENVIRONMENT AFTER LEBRON JAMES KEVIN P. BRAIG Our sports are liturgies-but do not have dogmatic creeds. There is no long bill of doctrines all of us recite. We bring the hungers of our spirits, and many of them, not all, are filled-filled with a beauty, ex- cellence, and grace few other institutions now afford. Our sports need to be reformed-Ecclesia semper reformanda. Let not too much be claimed for them. But what they do superbly needs our thanks, our watchfulness, our intellect, and our acerbic love.' I. INTRODUCTION For decades, the community of high schools in the Ohio High School Ath- letic Association (OHSAA) has sought to regulate interscholastic athletics by prohibiting external influences upon students that are potentially inconsistent with the educational and community values of athletic participation. Tradi- tionally, the recruiting of a student for athletic purposes has been the primary influence that the OHSAA membership has sought to combat. -
Vulcan Football
2011 CAL U FOOTBALL GAME NOTES Vulcan Football 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 PSAC West Champions • 2008 PSAC Champions 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 NCAA Playoffs • 2007, 2008, 2009 NCAA Regional Champions 2007, 2008, 2009 NCAA Semifinalist 2007, 2008, 2009 ECAC Lambert Trophy Champions - “Beast of the East” THIS WEEK: Cal U concludes the regular VULCANS CLAIM SHARE OF TITLE, 34-28: GAME #11 season this weekend when it travles to face The Vulcans secured a share of their seventh- #18/16 Cal U (8-2) Cheyney. The Vulcans scored 24 points in the straight PSAC West title last week with a second quarter to claim a 34-28 victory over 34-28 victory over Edinboro. Redshirt junior at Edinboro last week on Senior Day. Meanwhile, quarterback Peter Lalich finished with 289 Cheyney (1-9) the Wolves suffered a 42-27 loss at C.W. Post passing yards and three touchdowns on in the final week of divisional play. 21-of-34 attempts. The Cal U defense limited the Fighting Scots to a season-low 37 rushing When: Saturday, Nov. 12, 2011 yards on 25 attempts. In the victory, the Where: Cheyney, Pa. Vulcans registered five sacks with four coming Stadium: O’Shields Stevenson Stadium (5,000) in the second half. Senior defensive lineman Kickoff: 1 p.m. vs. Thomas Mulabah tied his career highs with Series Record: Cal U leads 14-1 nine tackles (seven solo), 3.0 TFL and 2.0 sacks against Edinboro. Mulabah now holds the Cal U Captains: all-time school record with 33.0 TFL. -
CENTRAL COLLEGE MEDIA GUIDE Founded —1853 Enrollment — 1,400 Affiliation — Reformed Church in America President — Dr
2018 MEN’S TENNIS CENTRAL COLLEGE MEDIA GUIDE Founded —1853 Enrollment — 1,400 Affiliation — Reformed Church in America President — Dr. Mark Putnam Membership — Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Division III Founded in 1853, Central College of Pella, Iowa, is a private, residential four-year liberal arts college known for its academic rigor and strength in global experiential learning, STEM (science, technology, engineering and math), sustainability education, athletics success and tradition, and leadership and service. Central continues to value its long- standing relationship with the Reformed Church in America that began in 1916. The college participates in NCAA Division III athletics and is a member of the Iowa Conference. Central is an active part of the Greater Des Moines region and just two minutes from Lake Red Rock, Iowa’s largest lake. Central is a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, Division III, and the lowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. Men compete in baseball, football, basketball, tennis, golf, wrestling, soccer, track and cross country, while women compete in tennis, golf, track, softball, volleyball, cross country, soccer and basketball. Rugby is offered at the club level. The A.N. Kuyper Athletics Complex The A.N. Kuyper Athletics Complex is located at the corner of Independence Street and West Fifth Street in southwest Pella. The complex includes P.H. Kuyper Gymnasium (1970), H.S. Kuyper Fieldhouse (1987), Ron and Joyce Schipper Stadium (1977), the baseball and softball fields (1978), Ryerson Golf Practice Range (2005), tennis courts (1992), soc- cer field (2005) and the Ron Schipper Fitness Center (1999). The complex also includes practice and intramural softball diamonds and football fields. -
Association Considers Appeal in Stanford Drug-Testing Case
November 23.1987, Volume 24 Number 41 Nominees for vacancies Association considers appeal on Council announced in Stanford drug-testing case The NCAA Nominating Com- mittee this week announced its NCAA legal counsel is studying a of anabolic steroid and cocaine use to Stanford University.” possible appeal of a Federal judge’s slate of candidates to fill January by athletes. For that reason, the Association 1988 vacancies on the NCAA ruling that would exclude Stanford NCAA counsel John J. Kitchin will continue with its plans for drug University’s student-athletes from Council, as well as its choice to of Kansas City, Missouri, said he testing at certain fall championships the Association’s drug-testing pro- serve for the next two years as and the Association’s top officers and football bowl games. gram in all sports but football and Division I11 vice-president. would discuss the case and appeal Robert Van Nest, attorney for men’s basketball. Each year, the committee’s procedures during the week of No- Stanford football player BarryMc- nominations appear in the Offi- Superior Court Judge Conrad vember 23. Keever and soccer player Jennifer Rushing ruled November I9 in San cial Notice of the annual Con- Kitchin told The NCAA News Hill, who fought the NCAA testing, Jose, California, that involuntary vention and in The NCAA News. November 20 that he had just re- said the decision “declares (the pro- testing by the NCAA violates the The Official Notice will be mailed ceived a copy of the judge’s ruling gram) vastly overbroad both in test- U.S. -
NCAA Division I Football Records (Coaching Records)
Coaching Records All-Divisions Coaching Records ............. 2 Football Bowl Subdivision Coaching Records .................................... 5 Football Championship Subdivision Coaching Records .......... 15 Coaching Honors ......................................... 21 2 ALL-DIVISIONS COachING RECOrds All-Divisions Coaching Records Coach (Alma Mater) Winningest Coaches All-Time (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 35. Pete Schmidt (Alma 1970) ......................................... 14 104 27 4 .785 (Albion 1983-96) BY PERCENTAGE 36. Jim Sochor (San Fran. St. 1960)................................ 19 156 41 5 .785 This list includes all coaches with at least 10 seasons at four-year colleges (regardless (UC Davis 1970-88) of division or association). Bowl and playoff games included. 37. *Chris Creighton (Kenyon 1991) ............................. 13 109 30 0 .784 Coach (Alma Mater) (Ottawa 1997-00, Wabash 2001-07, Drake 08-09) (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 38. *John Gagliardi (Colorado Col. 1949).................... 61 471 126 11 .784 1. *Larry Kehres (Mount Union 1971) ........................ 24 289 22 3 .925 (Carroll [MT] 1949-52, (Mount Union 1986-09) St. John’s [MN] 1953-09) 2. Knute Rockne (Notre Dame 1914) ......................... 13 105 12 5 .881 39. Bill Edwards (Wittenberg 1931) ............................... 25 176 46 8 .783 (Notre Dame 1918-30) (Case Tech 1934-40, Vanderbilt 1949-52, 3. Frank Leahy (Notre Dame 1931) ............................. 13 107 13 9 .864 Wittenberg 1955-68) (Boston College 1939-40, 40. Gil Dobie (Minnesota 1902) ...................................... 33 180 45 15 .781 Notre Dame 41-43, 46-53) (North Dakota St. 1906-07, Washington 4. Bob Reade (Cornell College 1954) ......................... 16 146 23 1 .862 1908-16, Navy 1917-19, Cornell 1920-35, (Augustana [IL] 1979-94) Boston College 1936-38) 5. -
Saint John's Football
SAINT JOHN’S FOOTBALL OFFICIAL 2013 GAME INFORMATION National Champions | 1963, 1965, 1976, 2003 MIAC Champions | 1932, 1935, 1936, 1938, 1953, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1982, 1985, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009 SAINT JOHN’S UNIVERSITY JOHNNIES (2-0, 0-0 MIAC) at No. 2 UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS TOMMIES (2-0, 0-0 MIAC) Saturday, September 21, 2013; 1:10 p.m. | O’Shaughnessy Stadium (cap. 5,000); St. Paul, Minn. Media Contacts: Athletic Media Relations Director, Saint John’s - Ryan Klinkner Today’s Matchup (320-363-3127, [email protected]); Sports Information Director, St. Thomas - Gene McGivern (651-962-5903, [email protected]) Series Notes Series Record: SJU leads, 49-31-1 (Current Streak: UST, 3) Tune In: The game can be heard live on WBHR-660 AM, across central Minnesota, at Saint John’s: SJU leads, 24-10-1 (Current Streak: UST, 2) WLOL-1330 AM in Minneapolis/St. Paul and KOWZ-1170 AM in Waseca, which covers at St. Thomas: SJU leads, 24-19-0 (Current Streak: UST, 1) most of southern Minnesota and into western Wisconsin. Mark Lewandowski, Bryan Neutral: UST leads, 2-1-0 (Current Streak: UST, 1) Backes, Mike Carr and Charlie Carr will call all the action beginning with Johnnies Maga- Last Saint John’s Win: Oct. 17, 2009 (20-17, OT) zine at 5 p.m. and the pre-game show at 5:30 p.m. The game will also be broadcast on Last St. Thomas Win: Sept. -
Coach JT Curtis Headed for 500 Career Victory
Profile: Coach J. T. Curtis Headed for 500 th Career Victory Updated 10-9-11 J. T. Curtis, head football coach at John Curtis Christian School in River Ridge, LA, is closing in on the 500-win mark which would make him only the second coach in history—high school, college or professional--to reach that remarkable milestone . His record to date is 499-54-6, a winning percentage of .898. After going 0-10 his first year of coaching in 1969¸ Curtis has never had a losing record since. Spanning a total of 42 seasons, Curtis’ teams have: • Won 23 state championships in 30 trips to the title game (both state records). • Reached the state championship game the past 16 consecutive years, winning 11 (1996-present). • Won 5 straight championships (2004-08), also a state record. • Recorded double-digit victories (10 or more wins) for the past 35 consecutive seasons—since 1 st year of coaching—(1976-2010); record 499-44-6 through that stretch is winning percentage of 91.7%. • Won the district championship 34 of the last 35 seasons. • Reached the state playoffs the past 36 consecutive seasons. • Reached the state playoffs a total of 38 times. • Posted 11 perfect seasons. • Been undefeated in the regular season 16 times. Curtis, who will be 65 years old on Dec. 6, 2011, has also coached the Patriots to six state baseball championships. In addition to his coaching responsibilities, Curtis is the school’s headmaster, is an ordained minister and is a devoted family man with nine grandchildren and numerous family ties to the school’s administration and coaching staff. -
Coaches Association
MINNESOTA FOOTBALL COACHES ASSOCIATION Records & Awards • Hall of Fame • State Tournament • Conference Recaps A Publication of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association BEFORE THE GAME BEGINS CHAMPIONS ARE MADE Lev Sled Brute Rack yOuR START TO A wINNING SEASON Our innovative line of football and strength training equipment promotes proper technique and is designed to produce cham- pions. Rogers Athletic will help improve player performance on the field. 800-457-5337 RogersAthletic.com Chutes Cambria Salutes the 2009 Minnesota High School Football Coaches Hall of Fame Inductees Dave Hylla Dwight Lundeen Proctor High School Becker High School DeWayne Johnson Mike Mahlen Roger French Anoka High School Verndale High School Brigham Young University Minnesota High School Football Coaches Association PRSRT STD 901 East Ferry Street AUTO Le Sueur, MN 56058 U.S. POSTAGE PAID Hutchinson, MN 55350 Permit No. 60 COACHES ASSOCIATION COACHES MINNESOTA FOOTBALL A Publication of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association Coaches of the Minnesota Football A Publication Records & Awards • Hall of Fame • State Tournament • Conference Recaps • Conference Tournament • State • Hall of Fame & Awards Records High School HALL OF FAME ~ AWARDS MFCA 2008 Coach of the Year 55 MFCA 2008 Assistant Coach of the Year 55 Previous State Coach of the Year Recipients 56 Coach of the Year Questionnaire 57 FOOTBALL MFCA Hall of Fame Inductees 58 Previously Inducted Hall of Fame Members 61 MINNESOTA Hall of Fame Nomination Form 62 A Publication of the Minnesota Football -
Intercollegiate Football Researchers Association ™
INTERCOLLEGIATE FOOTBALL RESEARCHERS ASSOCIATION ™ The College Football Historian ™ Reliving college football’s unique and interesting history—today!! ISSN: 2326-3628 [October 2013… Vol. 6, No. 68] circa: Jan. 2008 Tex Noël, Editor ([email protected]) Website: http://www.secsportsfan.com/college-football-association.html Disclaimer: Not associated with the NCAA, NAIA, NJCAA or their colleges and universities. All content is protected by copyright© by the author. FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/theifra 100 Years Ago Today, Notre Dame’s First Trip to West Point Made Football History By Jim Lefebvre [www.CoachForANation.com] On the afternoon of November 1, 1913, a pair of football teams representing all- male institutions of higher learning met on the Cullum Hall field at the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York. On that day, it is said, football changed forever. For 18 students from the University of Notre Dame, a small Catholic college in northern Indiana, the trip began two days earlier, when they boarded a day coach in downtown South Bend, headed East on the longest football trek ever attempted at a school that began playing the game 25 years earlier. The captain of the Notre Dame squad, 25-year-old Knute Kenneth Rockne, reflected on his journey of the previous two decades. As a five-year-old, he was a new immigrant from Norway, learning English at the spanking new Brentano Elementary School in an area recently annexed to Chicago. Now, he stood at the very heart of American pride – ready to take on the accomplished young men to represent an entire nation on the playing field. -
2019 Football 2009 Fall Media Guide Central Centralcollege Media Guide
2019 FOOTBALL 2009 FALL MEDIA GUIDE CENTRAL CENTRALCOLLEGE MEDIA GUIDE IFC IFC Founded —1853 Enrollment — 1,100 Affiliation — Reformed Church in America President — Dr. Mark Putnam Membership — Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Division III Central College of Pella, Iowa, is a private, four-year liberal arts college. Central is known for its academic rigor, leadership and character formation, global experiential learning, STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) and sustainability educa- tion, athletics and service. The Central experience is rooted in exploration and self-discovery and enhanced by life in a residential community of 1,100 students. Founded in 1853, Central values its long-standing relationship with the Reformed Church in America. The college participates in NCAA Division III athletics and is a member of the American Rivers Conference. Pella is a thriving community of more than 10,000. It is famous for its annual Tulip Time Festival, its Dutch letter pastries and its fully-functional 1850s-style windmill. Pella is located just minutes from Red Rock Lake, Iowa’s largest lake, and is the corporate headquarters of several international companies, including Vermeer Corporation, Pella Corporation and Precision Pulley and Idler, Inc. (PPI). Niche.com includes Pella on Best Places to Live in Iowa, Safest Places to Live in Iowa and Best Places for Millennials in Iowa 2018 lists. Central offers 19 varsity sports. Men compete in baseball, football, basketball, tennis, golf, wrestling, soccer, track and cross country, while women compete in tennis, golf, track, softball, volleyball, cross country, soccer and basketball. Women's triathlon will be added in 2020.